Mercury in the Guyana Shield

The gold trade runs like a blood-red line through the history of Latin America since the Spanish conquistadors subjected native populations to a violent reign in search of El Dorado.

Today, gold is still

a driving economic force in the countries that sit atop the Guiana Shield, a 1.7 billion-year-old geological formation beneath the vast rainforests of Guyana, Suriname, Venezuela, Colombia, and Brazil. But the trade in the precious metal is propped up by a shadow sector few know about: the mercury market, itself a multi-million dollar industry.

The chemical element Hg,

most commonly referred to as mercury or quicksilver, is one of the drivers of the global gold market. It is widely used in small-scale gold mining because it’s an inexpensive and low-tech way to trap the hard-to-catch, fine gold mixed in with soils.

When added to sediment,

it binds with flecks of gold to form an amalgam. The mercury is subsequently burned off, leaving behind the gold. On average, miners use three grams of mercury to produce one gram of gold, but these numbers vary a lot depending on the applied technique. In small-scale mining operations, virtually all of the mercury used is released into the environment.

Mercury is one of the top 10 chemicals

that pose a major threat to public health, according to the World Health Organization. Small amounts of mercury in the human body can cause brain damage, kidney issues, and congenital disabilities.

Most of the 10 to 20 million miners

around the world who work in the small or medium-scale gold mining sector use the contaminant daily. It also pollutes waterways and accumulates in the food chain, impacting ecosystems and populations far removed from the mining itself.

Gold mining represents 37 percent of the global anthropogenic mercury emissions.

In 2017, a global treaty

that aims to reduce mercury pollution called the Minamata Convention entered into force. Now, 123 countries are party to the convention, which reduces and where possible bans the use of mercury in gold mining.

While alternatives exist,

policy-makers so far failed to provide subsistence miners in the Amazon who depend on mercury to efficiently produce gold and make ends meet with the tools and training they need to abandon or reduce the use of the liquid metal.

Between 70 and 80 percent of these miners

are trapped in a poverty cycle, working in informal and unlicensed mining operations where they’re often forced to use mercury by project owners or traders. Without viable alternatives, an illicit mercury market has flourished, fed by organized crime groups, networks of traffickers, and hidden corporate interests.

To understand the underworld of mercury,

we traveled to the jungles of the Amazon with an international team of journalists. We met with experts, traders, traffickers, and miners chasing the quicksilver from trade hubs in seaside towns, along the trafficking routes through the borderlands, and into the secluded mines in the dense rainforest. We found that illegally mined gold followed the same routes out of the jungle, and while subsistence miners were prosecuted for mercury use, middlemen got rich.

Mister Wee Wee, an advocate for gold miners

in Suriname explains that, despite the risks, many miners have no other option than to continue to work with the liquid quicksilver. “If you want to take the knife out of the hands of a child, you have to replace it with a stick or a toy,” he says.

About the project

“MERCURY”, is a production of InfoAmazonia, a network of journalists who investigate the main environmental issues in the nine countries of the Amazon. The investigation was conducted in four countries for over one year. The work was done in partnership with journalists from Armando.Info in Venezuela and Fantástico (TV Globo) in Brazil. Along with this special investigation, we will launch a documentary directed by Tom Laffay.

The entire production is supported by the Rainforest Journalism Fund of the Pulitzer Center and "IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) National Committee of the Netherlands (IUCN NL).

Parts of our investigation are published by Knack (Belgium), Stabroek News (Guyana), De Ware Tijd and UnitedNews.sr (Suriname), in addition to stories by our partners in Brazil and Venezuela.

Project team

Lead Investigator

  • Bram Ebus

Reporters

  • Fabiano Villela (Fantástico-TV Globo)
  • G. I. Sutherland (Stabroek News)
  • Fábio Diniz (Fantástico-TV Globo)
  • Marcelo Marques (Fantástico - TV Globo)
  • Marcos David Valverde (Armando Info)
  • Sam Cowie (InfoAmazonia)
  • Sônia Bridi (Fantástico TV Globo)
  • Wilfred Leeuwin (De Ware Tijd)
  • Tom Laffay (InfoAmazonia)

Project coordinator

  • Gustavo Faleiros (InfoAmazonia)

Editor in chief

  • Kate Wheeling (InfoAmazonia)

Editors

  • Cristine Kist (Fantástico - TV Globo)
  • Ewald Scharfenberg (Armando Info)
  • Fillipi Nahar (Fantástico - TV Globo)
  • Gustavo Faleiros (InfoAmazonia)
  • Patricia Marcano (Armando Info)

Producers

  • James Alberti (Fantástico - TV Globo)
  • Mônica Reolom (Fantástico - TV Globo)

Videos

  • Erik Von Poser (Fantástico - TV Globo)
  • Luiz Felipe Saleh (Fantástico - TV Globo)
  • Rafael Norton (Fantástico - TV Globo)
  • Tom Laffay (InfoAmazonia)

Website development

Translations

  • Angelica Baldelomar (English)
  • Jerusa Rodrigues (Portuguese)
  • Melanie Morazzani de Casanova (Spanish)

Social media

  • Laura Clisánchez

Documentary team

Direction and cinematography

  • Tom Laffay

Lead investigator

  • Bram Ebus

Producer

  • Gustavo Faleiros

Editor

  • J.C. Van´t Kruis

Investigators

  • Tom Laffay
  • Gaulbert Sutherland
  • Wilfred Leeuwin

Narrator

  • Abel Harris

Motion Design

  • Sérgio Castro

Sound Design

  • J.C. Van´t Kruis

Creative Consultant

  • Emily Wright

Second Editor

  • Tom Laffay